While Cooke and Wheatstone were developing their telegraph and attempting to
interest various rail companies in it, Edward Davy was developing an
electric telegraph with a relay system. Davy however, unlike Cooke and
Wheatstone or Morse, is completely unknown today.

In 1836 Davy, who had an apothecary's practice in the Strand, published his
'Outline of a new plan of telegraphic communication', and in 1837 carried
out telegraphic experiments in Regents Park. He laid down a mile of copper
wire in the park and developed his relay system or 'electric renewer' which
renewed the signal with the aid of a local battery to compensate for
attenuation. He demonstrated a working model of his telegraph in 1837 and
late in December he exhibited a needle telegraph in the Exeter Hall in
central London. He applied for a patent for his telegraph which was granted
on 4 July 1838 after the Solicitor General asked Faraday's advice as to
whether it constituted a different mechanism from that of Cooke and
Wheatstone who had patented their telegraph on 12 December 1837. Davy
managed to interest two railway companies in his telegraph, but left England
for Australia before developing a practical system or completing
negotiations. Eventually his patent was bought by the Electric Telegraph Co.
in 1847 for 600 pounds.

Why did he suddenly leave England, just when it seemed as though his
telegraph might be successfully developed? A few years earlier he had
married Mary Minshull, but the marriage had irretrievably broken down and
Mary Davy tried unsuccessfully to divorce him. Her extravagance and Davy's
lack of business sense led to mounting debts, some of which his father
settled for him. But as Edward Davy wrote, 'what with my wife's riots at
the door ... & with this added to writs, summonses, etc. you will not much
wonder that I should wish to get out of the way of it ...'

In April 1839 he set sail for Australia. Once in Australia he tried various
pursuits. He edited the Adelaide Examiner for three years, built up a small
medical practice and for a time ran the Yatala copper smelting works, where
he developed a process for copper refining. Eventually he settled down to
practice medicine and engage in local politics in Malmsbury where he served
three times as Mayor. He married twice in Australia and was survived by
numerous children.